Sleeping with the Presidents

Nov. 5, 2012

Updated Aug. 21, 2013 1:17 p.m.

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Newlyweds John and Jackie Kennedy stayed at the San Ysidro Inn near Santa Barbara at the end of their honeymoon. This photo hangs near the entrance to the Hadcienda Lounge at the hotel. REGISTER FILE PHOTO

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President Warren Harding died at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in 1923. AP file photo

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The Kennedy Suite at San Ysidro Ranch near Santa Barbara, where the future president and first lady spent a short time near the end of their honeymoon.. REGISTER FILE PHOTO

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The State Game Lodge at Custer State Park was the "Summer White House" for President Calvin Coolidge in 1927. TOM UHLENBROCK, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

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Widely grinning President John F. Kennedy, right, looks up toward comedian Bob Hope in New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, May 30, 1961. The President was principal speaker at the Salute to General Omar N. Bradley and the First Annual World Peace Through World Health dinner of the Eleanor Roosevelt Cancer Foundation. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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More than two dozen presidents have stayed at The Greenbrier in West Virginia, a popular cool mountain getaway from Washington's summer. But its greatest mark was a secret underground nuclear bunker created to serve as the secret gathering place for the U.S. Congress in event of atomic war. You can stay at the hotel and tour the bunker. CHRIS DORST, AP

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A large American flag hangs in the lobby of the Brown Palace Hotel in Denver in this 2008 file photo. Theodore Roosevelt went to the Brown in 1905, since then every U.S. president has visited the hotel. ED ANDRIESKI, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Theodore Roosevelt was well traveled and turned up at some out of the way hotels, including the Wawona Hotel near Yosemite National Park. FILE: BRUCE CHAMBERS, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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The Biltmore Hotel was a favorite of Democratic politicians. It's where John and Robert Kennedy plotted strategy for JFK's 1960 Democratic convention win. MANNY CRISOSTOMO, SACRAMENTO BEE FILE PHOTO

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President Ford ducks behind his limousine and is hustled into the vehicle after a shot was fired as he left the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, September 22, 1975. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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The Menger Hotel, where Theodore Roosevelt stayed while training his Rough Riders in San Antonio for fighting in Cuba during the Spanish American War. MCT FILE PHOTO

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The Palace Hotel in San Francisco is one of the few buildings that survived the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire. President Warren G. Harding died there in 1923. MARK RIGHTMIRE, REGISTER FILE PHOTO

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The Garden Court restaurant in The Palace Hotel in San Francisco was originally the carriage entrance. It now has a glass dome with chandeliers. President Warren G. Harding died at the hotel in 1923. MARK RIGHTMIRE, REGISTER FILE PHOTO

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The St. Francis, shown above, was part of two dark moments for Republicans – the most famous being the attempted pot-shot assassination of Gerald Ford by Sarah Jane Moore randomly aiming a .45 semi-automatic across the street outside of the hotel. Ford survived unscathed, which can't be said about Charles Evans Hughes, the Republican nominee for president MARK RIGHTMIRE, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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Outside the Presidential Lounge on of the bars in the hotel are portraits of the presidents who have visited the inn over the years. MICHAEL GOULDING, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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Susan Christian Goulding of Seal Beach sits in the chair built for President William Howard Taft's visit. MICHAEL GOULDING, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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President William Howard Taft. The owner of the Mission Inn had a chair especially built for the rotund chief executive. File photo

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Future President Theodore Roosevelt shown here during his earlier "Rough Rider" days of the Spanish-American War. He stayed at the Menger Hotel in San Antonio while drilling with the unit. Courtesy of the Theodore Roosevelt collection, Harvard College Library.

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John F. Kennedy was connected with many hotels around the country, including the Biltmore in Los Angeles which served as his base during the 1960 Democratic National Convention. Register file photo

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An illustration of a hotel key card with the Presidential seal. Photo illustration created by Kyle Sackowski, The Orange County Register

Newlyweds John and Jackie Kennedy stayed at the San Ysidro Inn near Santa Barbara at the end of their honeymoon. This photo hangs near the entrance to the Hadcienda Lounge at the hotel. REGISTER FILE PHOTO

"Warren Harding died here" doesn't quite have the tourist draw of "Washington slept here," but for the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, the distinction of being the only hotel where a president of the United States drew his last breath is enough to put it into the pantheon of presidential sleep spots.

Scores of hotels around the country can lay claim to a little White House luster, having bedded down famous men before, during or after their stints in the White House. Most will tack the term "Presidential Suite" onto the spot and start charging the highest rates in the house.

But there are a handful of places around the country that have earned a tighter tie with presidential history. Two gave us political terms we still use – "lobbyist" and "smoke-filled rooms." Another might have cost one man the presidency and later could have cost a president his life. It's not surprising that the majority of the places on my short list are big, old, luxurious hotels in a few key cities. Washington, Chicago and New York are on the list. San Francisco has two. Here's my collection of must-stay presidential hotels, with a list of also-rans.

The Willard, Washington, D.C.

Birth of 'the lobbyist'

The nation's capital is crammed with hotels containing presidential lore. The Hay-Adams near the White House was built on the site of homes of John Adams' grandson and Abraham Lincoln's private secretary. Along with introducing air conditioning to the sweltering summer capital, it was used as a fundraising spot related to the Iran-contra affair during President Ronald Reagan's term. Barack Obama moved in for two weeks before his inauguration when the Bush administration said the usual guest lodging, Blair House, was unavailable. Until recently, another hotel in town was synonymous with political corruption: the Watergate. It's now just offices and condominiums. But for a true slice of American history, nothing can beat the Willard. A couple of doors down Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House, it has hosted presidents going back to Zachary Taylor. Lincoln snuck into town after his 1860 election (Washington is basically a Southern town and many in the capital were friendly to the secessionist cause) and used the Willard as his pre-inauguration headquarters. Lincoln's bill is on display in the hotel's small museum. But its place in the dictionary was cemented by Ulysses S. Grant, the great Civil War general turned not-so-great president. Grant had the habit of making irregular strolls to the Willard to enjoy a cigar. Men seeking to influence legislation or gain political appointments would hang out, hoping they could elbow their way to the president to make their case. The crowd that loitered in the lobby were dubbed "lobbyists." The term has stuck for advocates of all types who seek to bend laws and regulations by plying the halls of Congress, the offices on K Street, the party circuit and, yes, occasionally a hotel lobby – including the still sparkling Willard.

The Blackstone Hotel, Chicago 'Smoke-filled rooms'

No smoking is allowed at the hotel on the south end of downtown Chicago, an ironic policy given that it was plumes of cigar, cigarette and pipe smoke that gave the hotel its place in presidential history. Chicago was a frequent choice for political conventions before World War II, hosting 26. It was often a choice to keep politics away from the East Coast power centers and also to bring in as many people as possible, with its excellent rail connections to anywhere in the country and huge numbers of hotel rooms. With many of the conventions going on at the old Chicago Coliseum, the Blackstone was frequently the center of the wheeling and dealing that went on in the days before political conventions were a just-for-TV advertisement for each political party. The hotel's pinnacle came during the 1920 Republican Party convention. On the first ballot, the leader was retired Army Gen. Leonard Wood (the major U.S. Army base in Missouri is named for him) with 287.5 votes. Illinois Gov. Frank Lowden was second with 211.5 votes. The convention at the Coliseum remained deadlocked and the action moved to a group of power brokers who gathered behind closed doors at the Blackstone to horse-trade federal jobs and money for votes. On the 10th ballot, Warren Harding – who had received a scant 65 votes on the first ballot – was proclaimed the nominee. Raymond Clapper, a reporter for the United Press wire service, wrote that the victory had not come on the convention floor, but in the "smoke-filled rooms" of the power brokers. Adding to the mystique, the hotel was a favorite of Chicago mobster Al Capone. The term became synonymous with decisions made out of sight by power brokers. By the end of the past century, the Blackstone had fallen into disrepair and the urban issues of its neighborhood made it a less desirable address for business and leisure travelers. It closed in 2000 but reopened as a Renaissance property in 2008 with fewer but larger rooms, modern amenities and an emphasis on the business trade and community events.

Palace Hotel, San Francisco

A president dies

The hotel was brand new when the 1906 earthquake struck, sending the most famous opera singer of the day, Enrico Caruso, running into Market Street, reportedly in his bedclothes. The terrified Italian tenor, visiting San Francisco as part of an American tour, vowed never to return. He kept his promise. The hotel was gutted by the fire that raged after the earthquake. Three years later it reopened as the city's premier hotel address. In 1923, it hosted President Warren G. Harding, the handsome Ohio newspaper publisher whom historians rank with Grant as among the worst presidents in our nation's history. Harding had been ill with flu-like symptoms when he left for a trip to the Northwest, which included playing golf in Vancouver and making speeches in Seattle. He was scheduled to go to Yosemite, but instead, the weak chief executive was taken to San Francisco and installed in room 8064, a high-floor suite overlooking Market Street and Lotta's Fountain, a gathering place for survivors of the 1906 earthquake. While his wife was reading to him, Harding passed away, most likely from a heart condition – it's not completely known, because Mrs. Harding would not allow an autopsy. After decline dropped the Palace out of the top ranks of the city's hotels, it has been reborn under the Starwood Luxury Collection brand as one of the city's finest. Its Pied Piper bar is famous for an illuminist painting by Maxfield Parrish.

St. Francis Hotel, San Francisco

Two close calls

In many cities, different parties tended to hunker down at different hotels. In Los Angeles, Republicans staked out the Century Plaza while Democrats favored the Biltmore downtown. In San Francisco, the Democrats more often stayed at the Fairmont atop Nob Hill, while Republicans preferred the St. Francis, just off Union Square. The St. Francis was part of two dark moments for Republicans – the most famous being the attempted assassination of President Gerald Ford by Sarah Jane Moore randomly aiming a handgun across the street outside of the hotel. Ford survived unscathed, which can't be said about Charles Evans Hughes, the Republican nominee for president in 1916. In a political route that's hard to imagine today, the former New York governor left a seat on the Supreme Court to run for president as a Republican. He ran as a Roosevelt-style progressive. Hughes destroyed any chance at success with bad moves while in California. First, he failed to show up for an appointment with California's progressive governor, Hiram Johnson, a rising national political power broker. Hughes made matters worse by going ahead with a banquet at the St. Francis, despite a strike by the hotel's unionized kitchen staff. Progressives were appalled and Hughes lost the state and its 13 electoral votes by just over 3,000 votes. It sealed Hughes' electoral doom and sent Woodrow Wilson back to the White House for a second term. The St. Francis is famous for the clock in the lobby where generations of visitors have "met at the clock" before going out on the town.

Menger Hotel, San Antonio

Ready for war

The Alamo is practically a holy site in Texas, the place where Davey Crockett, Jim Bowie and a small knot of others held out against a superior force of Mexican troops until they were finally crushed and killed in a bloody siege. Today, the small building sits in the midst of Alamo Plaza, a surprisingly peaceful and leafy part of San Antonio, the seventh largest city in the U.S. with 1.3 million people. The "Texicans" lost the battle but won the war that saw Texas briefly become an independent country before merging with the United States (and shortly thereafter join the ill-fated slave-state secession by the Confederacy that brought on the Civil War.) Across the street from the Alamo is an old hotel that in some ways is just as important to American history as the Alamo – and you can still check in. It has beautiful, cool- blue tiles and handsome cream-colored Corinthian columns in the atrium. The Menger Hotel is where former Assistant Navy Secretary Theodore Roosevelt stayed while assembling his Rough Riders to fight the Spanish in Cuba. Roosevelt trained his troops on a makeshift parade ground that's now Roosevelt Park. The troops marched off to Cuba, where the charge up San Juan Hill became one of the most famous moments in the war and catapulted Roosevelt from rich, connected New York politician-turned-bureaucrat into a national political figure. He was selected as William McKinley's running mate in the 1900 election after the unexpected death of Vice President Garret Hobart. A year later, Roosevelt became president when McKinley was assassinated by an anarchist in Buffalo, N.Y., and the rich-boy bureaucrat who remade himself into a tough-talking, risk-taking warrior-politician while staying at the Menger Hotel was on his way to having his face memorialized on Mount Rushmore with Washington, Lincoln and Jefferson.

Mission Inn, Riverside

A big man and the bar

The Mission Inn, the amazing citadel of the Inland Empire with its Spanish-Moroccan-Asian mix, has drawn more than a century of Republican politicians, going back to Benjamin Harrison, who visited the forerunner of the hotel. You'll find a copy of the chapel in Assisi, Italy; a huge Buddha where Raquel Welch once cavorted; and staircases and walkways that seem to be geometrically improbable, like an E.M. Escher painting. Frank Miller, the colorful founder, used to greet the train from the East Coast in full Franciscan monk's garb and lead the procession of guests back to the hotel. Theodore Roosevelt was the first president to stay the night, in 1903. Two of the country's most interesting presidential artifacts are on display. First is a massive, carved wood chair with sturdy legs and bowed armrests that Miller had built for a visit by President William Howard Taft. Though generations of hotel visitors have taken their turn to be seated – sometimes three at a time – in the seat built for the 300-pound-plus Taft, there are reports that the chief executive himself declined to use a chair so obviously designed to accommodate his girth. Taft could be that way – twice getting stuck in a bathtub at the White House. The second spot is the hotel's bar, which in the late 1940s was a meeting and reception room – the least expensive to rent in the place. It's where Richard Nixon from nearby Whittier married his girlfriend, Pat. The room was later converted into the Presidential Lounge, with portraits of the presidents who have visited over the years hung on the outside (note they are all Republicans, with the exception of John F. Kennedy). You can now have a cocktail in the room where the Nixons tied the knot.

The Palace, 2 New Montgomery St., San Francisco, 415-512-1111 or www.sfpalace.com. Rooms from $229 per night.

The Westin St. Francis, 335 Powell St., San Francisco, 415-397-7000 or www.westinstfrancis.com. Rates from $269 per night.

The Menger, 204 Alamo Plaza, San Antonio, 210-223-4361 or www.mengerhotel.com. Rooms from $129 per night.

The Mission Inn Hotel and Spa, 3649 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside. www.missioninn.com or 951-784-0300. Room rates vary by season, with winter rates starting at $229 a night. Book well in advance for the famous post-Thanksgiving festival of Christmas lights.

TIP: For all hotels, note that prices rise sharply during peak periods, particularly in Washington and San Francisco. Book as far in advance as you can. Rates are often lower on the weekend than during weekdays.

Sidebar: Other presidential sleep spots

Runners-up: Some other notable hotels with presidential ties from around the country. The Arizona Biltmore in Phoenix is where Sen. John McCain gave his 2008 concession speech. It has hosted several presidents. The Brown Palace is the Denver hangout for every president since Theodore Roosevelt in 1905 - with the exception of Calvin Coolidge and Barack Obama.

More than two dozen presidents have stayed at The Greenbrier in West Virginia, a popular cool mountain getaway from Washington’s summer. But its greatest mark was a secret underground nuclear bunker created to serve as the secret gathering place for the U.S. Congress in event of atomic war. You can stay at the hotel and tour the bunker. The turreted Windsor Hotel in Americus, Ga., was the unofficial headquarters of the White House during the presidency of Jimmy Carter who came from the tiny nearby town of Plains. Now affiliated with Best Western, it’s across the street from the headquarters of the Carter-founded Habitat for Humanity headquarters.

San Ysidro Ranch, now owned by beanie-baby magnate Ty Warner, played host to John F. Kennedy and his bride (and future first lady) Jackie near the end of their honeymoon tour. The Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles has been a Democratic Party favorite for decades. Robert F. Kennedy often barked orders from his hotel room bathtub to underlings working on his brother, John’s, convention campaign in Los Angeles in 1960. The hotel is where Lyndon Johnson decided to give up his powerful job as Senate Majority Leader to run with Kennedy as vice-president.

One of the best photos of a president is of the taciturn Calvin Coolidge wearing a full Indian headdress while on tour in the western United States. You can still sample part of “Cool Cal’s” vacation destinations at the State Game Lodge, the 1927 “summer White House” in Custer State Park, S.D. It’s famous as a jumping off point to go see buffalo. Dwight Eisenhower also stayed there in 1953. Waldorf Astoria, New York City: Every U.S. President since Franklin Roosevelt has stayed at the Park Avenue palace. The train lines into Grand Central Terminal run underneath the street and presidents at one time could disembark from a secure special platform adjacent to the hotel. Carlyle Hotel, New York City: John F. Kennedy’s favorite haunt in Manhattan, it’s where he met Marilyn Monroe after she sang her infamous “Happy Birthday Mr. President” tune at Madison Square Garden. On Monday nights, Woody Allen still plays with a Dixieland jazz band at the hotel.

Theodore Roosevelt was well traveled and turned up at some out of the way hotels, including the Wawona Hotel near Yosemite National Park and the Copper Queen in Bisbee, Ariz. Before Barack Obama put Hawaii on the presidential vacation map, George H.W. Bush was fond of the Grand Wailea on the sunny southwest coast of Maui. The Best Western Gettysburg Inn was the former operations center when President Dwight Eisenhower stayed at his nearby farm while president.

The Best Western President Hotel in Manhattan was formerly the President Taft Hotel. Today each room celebrates a president with photos and prints. The Clinton Room contains memorabilia from McDonalds, the president’s dietary Achilles heel while in the White House.

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